PSC1341 Chapter 1 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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PSC1341 Chapter 1

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PSC1341 Chapter 1 Definitions Physical Science: any of the natural sciences (as physics, chemistry, and astronomy) that deal primarily with nonliving materials. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: PSC1341 Chapter 1


1
PSC1341Chapter 1
2
Definitions
  • Physical Science any of the natural sciences (as
    physics, chemistry, and astronomy) that deal
    primarily with nonliving materials.
  • Physics a science that deals with matter and
    energy and their interactions.
  • Chemistry a science that deals with the
    composition, structure, and properties of
    substances and with the transformations that they
    undergo.

3
Scientific Method
  • Observation There are two types of
    observations, qualitative (the product is blue)
    or quantitative (the reaction produced 17.0 grams
    of product. Observations are often the catalyst
    to formulating a problem. They are also
    important in our experiments.
  • Hypothesis A hypothesis is a possible
    explanation for an observation.
  • Experiment An experiment is something we do to
    test the hypothesis
  • Theory A theory (or model) is a set of tested
    hypothesis that gives an overall explanation of
    some part of nature.
  • Law A law is a summary of observed behavior.

4
Scientific Method
Observation
Hypothesis
Theory
Experiment
5
Properties
  • Extensive does matter how much you have.
    Example mass, volume, length
  • Intensive does not matter how much you have.
    Example color, temperature, density.

6
Measurement
12
13
  • This measurement is 12.54 cm

12
13
  • This measurement is 12.90 cm not 12.9 cm

7
Precision and Accuracy
  • Precision how closely individual measurements
    agree with each other. In the case of the blue
    line they should be within /- 0.01 cm of each
    other.
  • Accuracy closeness to correct value.
  • Usually, precise measurements are also accurate.

8
Significant figuresAn indication of precision
  • All non-zero numbers are significant
  • Captive zeros are always significant. (203)
  • Leading zeros are never significant. (0.032)
  • Tailing zeros are significant only if there is a
    decimal point. (124,000 or 0.3100)
  • The number of significant figures in a
    measurement tells something about the instrument
    that took the measurement.
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